Michael Schumacher stable; brain injury expert has warning
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) - Michael Schumacher remains in stable condition following a skiing accident that left the Formula One great with severe head injuries and in a coma since Dec. 29, his manager said on Friday.
The statement from manager Sabine Kehm does not mention the word ''critical'' for the first time in describing the condition of the seven-time world champion.
Schumacher has been in an induced coma in a Grenoble hospital since the crash in the French Alps.
''Michael's family is very happy and confident with the work of the team of doctors treating Michael, and they trust them completely. Michael's condition is still considered as stable,'' Kehm said in an email.
In the first statement since Schumacher's wife, Corinna, appealed for the family to be left in peace on Jan. 7, Kehm repeated that ''any information regarding Michael's health not coming from the doctors treating him or from his management must be treated as pure speculation.''
Doctors treating Schumacher in Grenoble have not commented on his condition since Jan. 6, when they said they still regarded him to be critical.
The 45-year-old Schumacher hit his head on a rock at the Meribel ski resort.
Schumacher retired from F1 in 2012 as the most successful driver in series history.
Brain expert sounds alarm about Schumacher's future
(SI.com) -- The speculation about Michael Schumacher's condition and future continues.
A story in the U.K.'s The Independent on Friday contains a dire warning from a brain specialist that the Formula One legend will never again be himself if he survives his catastrophic head injury.
Dr. Richard Greenwood of the University College London Hospital, speaking at an announcement about the findings of a brain trauma study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association Psychiatry, is quoted as saying that Schumacher's hopes of rehabilitation and resuming a normal life are very limited: 'If Schumacher survives, he will not be Schumacher,' Dr. Greenwood said. 'That is a very, very hard process to take people through. They need to come to terms with their limitations - the fact they have changed.'
You can read The Independent's story here.
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